Read Witch of Christmas Past Online
Authors: Kendra Ashe
As Granny pointed out, Lady Hastings could be a powerful witch. It was possible she might fry my brain with a twitch of her nose, but I had a few tricks up my sleeve.
True, it had required tapping into my demon juice, but if need be, that was exactly what I intended to do.
It took some work, but I finally managed to talk Granny into staying in her room while Zane and I took care of Lady Hastings. The last thing I needed was for Granny to be in the way if all hell broke loose. I also didn’t want her to see me if I had to tap into that darkness that lived inside of me.
We waited behind some tall shrubbery until I saw a woman slowly strolling along one of the garden paths.
Since she obviously wasn’t a lady of the night, she had to be someone affluent, and not so innocent.
Unfortunately, we didn’t actually have a plan.
If she were a witch, she’d probably pick up on the fact that Zane was a vampire fairly quickly, but very few witches back on Mystique Island could detect my nature. Therefore, we figured it would be better if I approached her first, so as not to put her on the defensive right away.
When she was close, I stepped out from behind the shrub.
“Lady Hastings.”
She stopped in her tracks but didn’t scream. Instead, she studied me with the most stunning set of violet eyes I’d ever seen.
“Yes.” She nodded. “I’m Georgette Hastings. Is there a reason you are in my garden?”
Folding my arms across my chest, I got into a defensive stance. “Actually, there are a couple reasons. First, why are you sending people to the twenty-first century, and why to Mystique Island?”
“Well duh! Information!” I shot back.
“Very well,” Lady Hastings sighed. “My reasons for doing what I do are not your concern. If I were you, I would be far more concerned with my own problems. Death hovers near you, and it is bad for my energy … so please leave immediately.”
A wicked smile played on her ruby red lips. “Don’t you think if vampires were a substantial threat to me … I would already be dead?”
Lady Hastings swiped her hand in the air and suddenly Zane’s skin began to blister.
Zane’s rage erupted with furious growls.
My heart nearly stopped. Not only had his fangs popped out, but his eyes appeared to actually be glowing.
“Stop!” I screamed.
Showing weakness was a mistake. Her attack on Zane only intensified.
Desperate to stop her before she killed him, I raised my hand and shot black light at her, AKA, demon juice.
Shrieking, she fell to her knees and instantly the attack on Zane stopped.
Lady Hastings stared up at me with wide eyes. “What kind of monster are you?” she asked through clenched teeth.
Unlike the Black Moon Witch that I’d whipped, Georgette seemed to have a bit more stamina. She muttered something under her breath and suddenly the ground around me came alive with hundreds of slithering snakes.
It was her wicked laughter that broke the illusion.
The snakes were gone, but when I looked up, the witch was on her feet, glaring at me. “Do you care to see who wins this battle … or would you prefer to talk like civilized ladies?” she asked.
Zane literally flew at the witch, tackling her to the ground.
I had to act fast before he ripped her throat out. “No Zane! We need her alive.”
He hesitated, his fangs hovering mere inches from her arteries. I could actually feel waves of rage coming off him.
Finally, he stood up but was still glaring. “If you know what’s good for you … answer the questions.”
Wicked laughter bubbled from her mouth as she got to her feet.
The stunned expression on Zane’s face was almost comical.
“You would both be dead already … if that is what I wanted. Do that again, and you will be,” she threatened, sparks flying from her eyes.
Zane was ready to go after her again, but I held up my hand. “Like she said … let’s be civilized.”
“Hide those things. They are grotesque and distracting,” Lady Hastings said, pointing to my hands.
I glanced down at my hands and gasped. They hadn’t reverted back to their normal form.
“Why are you using a portal to Mystique Island?” I asked with as much civility as I could muster.
“If you must know … I have family there and I like to keep track.”
“How is it possible that you would have family there? Do you mean descendants?” I asked.
“That is none of your business. Now if it isn’t too much trouble, please remove your yourself from my garden.”
“Oh yes,” she sniffed. “That was a dreadful business … but since we now have murders on this side, I assume you chased him back.”
“I have no idea where he is, but I have information that someone else has crossed the time barrier. Who?”
“No more games! Answer!” Zane snarled.
Before the two of them could get into it again, I jumped in. “We have no money from this time period.”
“Information then.”
“Like what?” I was suddenly suspicious.
“Like … tell me what you are? I know you have no magic.”
Throwing me a look of warning, Zane interrupted,” Just answer before I kill you.”
“Excuse me, sir, but this is between us ladies,” she said, brushing him off.
“All I know is his name is Mr. Rosston and he gave me several thousand pounds to open the portal for him. He never bothered to tell me why he wanted to go.”
“I thought you didn’t charge people to go to Mystique Island because they acted as spies for you?” I interrupted.
Although she’d given up the information I’d asked for, we still weren’t any closer to identifying what Rosston was there for … or even who he was since it was doubtful he was using his real name on the other side.
“Oh that?” she said with a wave of her hand. “It’s nothing. The sickness will fade at dawn. There is a werewolf loose in our city. I was experimenting to see if the sickness would trigger the change so the beast can be identified.”
I knew Mood Madness would trigger a werewolf to change against their will, so as crazy as her excuse sounded, I believed her.
“Also … where is the portal on this side?” I wanted to know.
“That will cost you more than information,” she answered, folding her arms across her breasts.
“We don’t need your magic … just the location,” I informed her.
“You two really are a couple of lost puppies,” she commented with a burst of tinkling laughter.
This witch was really starting to get on my nerves. “The location?”
“Highgate Cemetery … the LaRose tomb. Now your turn.” Her smile turned hard. “What are you?”
“I am something you never want to be … but I promise, that’s exactly where you’re headed. I’m a fallen angel!” I returned her smile with a dark grin.
“I see. That’s very fascinating. You wouldn’t be interested in working with me, I suppose?”
“Right you are. Good day, Lady Hastings.”
Before she could pull any witchy stuff on us, we fled the garden, but I had no doubt she could find us if she really tried. Granny was right. Georgette Hastings was one powerful witch.
But who was this family she had on Mystique Island?
Before we could knock on the door, Granny already had it open and was ushering us in.
“Did you have a chat with her?” Granny asked.
I nodded. “Sure did. Everything went fine.”
It was just a little white lie, but I didn’t want her to know about the demon transformation.
But Granny wasn’t an easy witch to fool.
“What happened?” she asked, drawing her brows together.
Zane stepped in. “Lady Hastings decided to use some magic on us, but Izzy held her own.”
“With what magic?” she asked.
“Sorry … I had to use a bit of my demon juice.” I shrugged.
“Izzy … you have no idea what the outcome of that could be,” she warned.
“I know … but sometimes it takes magic when it comes to dealing with bitchy witches, and mine got stripped the moment I came back from the dead. It is so not fair!”
I was slipping back into my old habit of leaning on excuses to explain bad behavior, but at least I recognized it. “Sorry Granny. It just couldn’t be helped this time.”
Granny waved my words away. “We are just going to have to do something about your condition.”
Sighing, I sat on the edge of Granny’s bed, which was the only place in the room to sit.
“That’s one of the things I need to talk with you about.”
Zane broke in. “While you two are discussing family drama, I’m going to go scout Highgate so we can make sure the witch isn’t setting a trap for us. Will the two of you be okay to meet me at the LaRose tomb … say in about two hours?”
Granny nodded. “I know the place. There are rumors the tomb has mystical power. I guess now we know why.”
Suddenly, I was worried that Zane might leave without us.
Leaning down, he kissed my forehead. “See you soon.”
“Bye,” I said, squeezing his hand.
“Be careful,” I cautioned.
Giving my hand one last squeeze, he left.
“What was that all about?” Granny asked, sitting next to me on the bed.
“Nothing.” I shrugged. “I’m just not too comfortable getting separated during a time travel trip.”
“Hmm … if you say so.”
“Why don’t we get you packed up and I’ll catch you up on everything going on at home?” I suggested.
“What about the moon sickness?” she asked, worry clearly etched on her tired face.
Poor Granny. She always made everyone else’s problems her own.
“Lady Hastings claims it will be gone at midnight tonight. She was targeting those she suspected of being a werewolf. Apparently she believes there is one running loose in the city.”
“Either way … Lady Hastings seems like she has this under control, so let’s pack.”
“The only things I have any interest in taking with me are a couple of books. I don’t want these old clothes. It’s going to be great just to get back into my own clothes.”
Granny tapped a finger against her chin. “Whatever is happening there … it could be related to this latest time traveler.”
“My thoughts exactly, which means my first order of business when we get back … after a shower, will be to find this time traveler.”
“I think permanently closing the portal might be a good idea too.”
Granny could be right, but then again, time travel might actually have its uses too. Instead of bringing up that point, I decided it was time to tackle the issues of Muriel, and my father trading my soul to the devil.
I spent the next several minutes explaining what I’d discovered from the ghost of Captain Marsh concerning my current hellish existence, and then I dropped the bomb about my knowledge of Muriel being her sister.
“Why didn’t you ever tell us that Muriel was your sister?”
Sighing, Granny placed her hand over mine. “It is one of those skeletons in the closet that the family didn’t want out … and it wasn’t my secret to reveal.”
“I’m lost. What are you talking about?”
“Muriel was my half-sister,” she admitted, but then lapsed into silence.
“And?” I urged her to continue.
“My mother was married to someone else … before she married my father. The man’s name was Arnold Bennett.”
“Is that supposed to mean something? If she was your mother’s child, why doesn’t she have the Osborne name?”
Granny’s father was a Johnson, but her mother kept the Osborn name after marriage. That was a rule with the Osborn witches, and one my own mother hadn’t followed.
“My mother ran away until after Muriel was born. She then gave her to Arnold to raise, but to keep the child safe, he had to take a wife and pretend Muriel was hers. It was such a big secret at the time, I am not even sure Muriel knew the truth,” Granny explained.
This new information started the wheels turning in my head. “Is it possible that her murder could be connected to this curse?”
Granny shrugged. “It’s possible. I know my mother thought there might be a connection.”
About that time I was really wishing I could call on the ghost of my great grandmother and possibly get some answers, but there was also the issue of my immortal soul being sold off by my own father.
“What about my father’s deal with the devil? Do you know anything about that?”
Granny nodded. “Your father tried to go back on the deal, so I am sure of it.”
“Why was I kept in the dark about all this?” I asked, anger simmering in my voice.
I shook my head. “I don’t think it would have made a difference. According to the information I have, the only way out of this is exactly what Mr. Grim said, redemption. The question is, how do I earn my way out of it … and why is the devil so interested in my soul?”
Sighing, I got to my feet. “Well, I’ll tackle all of this when we get back. Right now, I just want to get through that portal and then jump into my shower. I have no idea how people survived in the 1800s.”
Leave it to Granny to knock me back to earth. That was okay. I had missed her harsh words of wisdom more than I’d realized. No one could keep me grounded like Granny could.